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Presentation 22/11/2011. EU perspectives on the Arctic. János Herman Head of the Delegation of the European Union to Norway. Overview. The EU interest in the Arctic region The EU policy and activities for the Arctic region. The European Union in the Arctic.
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Presentation 22/11/2011 EU perspectives on the Arctic János Herman Head of the Delegation of the European Union to Norway
Overview • The EU interest in the Arctic region • The EU policy and activities for the Arctic region
The European Union in the Arctic • The EU is in the Arctic; some Member States are Arctic, others have long-standing presence • It bears responsibility for changes in the North • The EU is affected by processes in the Arctic • It has the capacity and the means to contribute to Arctic cooperation • Not only Member States - Growing EU competence in sectors important for the Arctic • The EU is already doing a lot; could do more and better
Main objectives of the EU’s Arctic efforts • Protecting and preserving the Arctic in unison with its population • Promoting sustainable use of resources • Contributing to enhanced Arctic multilateral governance WE RECOGNISE THE RIGHTS AND RESPONSIBILITIES OF THE ARCTIC STATES. OUR OBJECTIVE IS COOPERATION WITH THEM.
The development of an EU Arctic Policy • March 2008: Joint paper by the High Representative and the European Commission on Climate Change and Security • October 2008: Resolution of the European Parliament • November 2008: Communication of the European Commission on the EU and the Arctic Region • December 2009: Council Conclusions
Cooperation frameworks • The Arctic Council Active contribution by the European Commission in its working groups Application for permanent observer status • Regional cooperation in the European Arctic • Northern Dimension • Barents Euro-Arctic Council • Cross-border Cooperation programmes
Shipping is likely to increase Yokohama-Hamburg
Cooperation with Norway • Consultations when developing EU ideas/dialogue continues – visit by Commissioner Damanaki • Importance of the EEA and other agreements • EU contribution to research – SAIS/Svalbard • Similarities between the last report to the Storting and the EU policies
The Way Forward • End of 2011 – The European Commission will present a progress report • Next spring Arctic Council members will present recommendations about observers • Work for the next FP continue – goal is to maintain funding levels • Discussions on global matters affecting the Arctic will gain momentum – climate change, safety of navigation, safety of economic activities, etc. WE LOOK FORWARD TO CONTINUED GOOD COOPERATOIN WITH NORWAY ON ALL THESE MATTERS